Thank you. I was thinking more of the e plus which is specifically for e bikes. Also the 2.0 in. I am a totally newbie to all this but I was assuming that a wider tyre would be more stable and grippy thus minimising the possibility of falling off in a skid.
It's not as simple as that. Tyres get grip above the coefficient of linear friction in two ways. Firstly, they use the stick-slip principle, where the molecules that are in contact with the surface stick, then get stretched up to a point that they let go, then restick. This stretching converts kinetic energy into heat. It affects the rolling resistance as well as grip, which is one reason that tyres with good rolling resistance have low grip.
Secondly, the rubber deforms arround the surface irregularities to lock onto them - more like gears meshing than something rolling on a flat surface.
For both of those to be effective, you need the correct contact pressure for the hardness of the rubber. A wider tyre has less contact pressure than a narrower one. Harder rubber needs a higher contact pressure.
A wider tyre has a bigger surface to stick-slip to and deform around, but it has less force on each small part causing that effect, so to keep its effect and get the advantage of its extra width, it would need to be made of softer rubber.
Anybody that ever rode one of those MZ motorbikes with the original Pneumant tyres will know about all this otherwise they probably wouldn't have lived to tell the tale.